You are here

MAX WEBER’İN YORUMUNDA MESLEK AHLAKI OLARAK DÜNYEVİ ASKETİKİZM

WORLDLY ASCETICISM AS THE ETHIC OF VOCATION IN THE INTERPRETATION OF MAX WEBER

Journal Name:

Publication Year:

Author NameUniversity of AuthorFaculty of Author
Abstract (2. Language): 
The explosive power of Max Weber’s thesis derived from the correlation of two concepts, Protestantism and capitalism. The words capitalism or spirits of capitalism are used in a very particular sense. They mean no less than the entire inner structure governing Western society’s attitudes. Not only its economy but also its legal system, its political structure, its institutionalized sciences and technology, its mathematically based music and architecture. Its economic modes of operation, works discipline and accountancy methods are all regarded as a whole life is rationality by Max Weber.
Abstract (Original Language): 
Max Weber’in hararetle tartışılan tezi, Protestanlık ve kapitalizm olmak üzere iki kavramdan kaynaklanmıştır. Kapitalizm veya kapitalizmin ruhu kelimeleri, çok özel anlamları içinde kullanılmaktadır. Bu kavramlar, Batı toplumunun içyapısını bütünüyle hükmü altına alan tutumlarından başka bir anlamı taşımamaktaydı. Yalnızca ekonomiyle değil, yasal sistemiyle, siyasal yapısıyla, kurumsallaşmış bilim ve teknoloji dokusuyla, matematiksel bir temele oturmuş müziğiyle ve mimarisiyle bütünlük göstermekteydi. İşlerin ekonomik yürütülüşü, Max Weber tarafından bir bütün olarak ekonomik hayatın rasyonelleşmesi olarak dikkate alınan, çalışma disiplini ve muhasebe esaslarına göre işlemektedir.
11-32

REFERENCES

References: 

Blayney, I. W. (1957). The age of Luther: the spirit of Renaissance-Humanism and the reformation, New York: Vantage Press.
Bottner, L. (1932). The reformed doctrine of Predestination, Philadelphia:
The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing.
Brubaker, R. (1984). The Limits of rationality: an essay on the social and
moral thought of Max Weber. London: Allan&Unwin.
Cohen, C. L. (1986). God’s Caress: The psychology of Puritan religious
experience. New York: Oxford University Press.
Forell, G. W. (1964). Faith active in love: an investigation of principles
under lying Luther’s social ethics. Minneapolis: Augsburg Publisher.
Freytag, G. (1910). Martin Luther. Chicago: The Open Court Publishing.
Kooman, W. J. (1954). By Faith alone: the life of Martin Luther, London:
Lutterworth Press.
KMŞ (2004). Kutsal kitap eski ve yeni antlaşma (Tevrat, Zebur, İncil).
İstanbul: Kitab-ı Mukaddes Şirketi.
Lecky, W. E. H. (1955). History of the rise and influence of the
Rationalism in Europe. New York: G. Braziller.
McGrath, A. E. (1910). A life of John Calvin: a study of the shaping of
Western culture. Cambridge: Mass Brassil Blackwell.
Oberman, H. A. (1985). Luther: man between God and the Devil. New
Heaven: Yale University Press.
Poggi, G. (1983) Calvinism and Capitalist spirit: Max Weber’s Protestant
ethic. Amberst: University of Massachusetts Press.
Schmidt, A. M. (1960). John Calvin and Calvinist tradition. New York:
Harper.
Schneider, H. (1958). Puritan mind. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press.
Watson, P. S. (1947). Let god be god. an interpretation of the theology of
Martin Luther. Philadelphia: Fortress Press.
Weber, M. (1984). The Protestant ethic and the spirit of Capitalism.
London: George Allen and Unwin.
Weber, M. (1978). Economy and society. California: University of
California Press.
Weber, M. (1964). The sociology of religion. London: Methuen Press.
Weber, M. (1947). The theory of social and economic organization. New
York: Free Press of Glencoe.
Weber, M. (1950). General economic history. New York: Free Press
Glencoe.
Weber, M. (1949). The methodology of the social sciences. New York:
Free Press.
Weber, M. (1966). The city. New York: Free Press.
Akalın, K. H. DEÜ SBE Dergisi, Cilt: 14, Sayı: 2
Weber, M. (1968). Basic concepts in sociology. New York: Citadel.
Weber, M. (1967). Ancient Judaism. London: Collier MacMillan.
Weber, M. (1969). On charisma and institution building. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
Weber, M. (1948). Essays in sociology. New York: Oxford University
Press.

Thank you for copying data from http://www.arastirmax.com